William Bernhardt - Capitol Offense

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In his thrilling novels of suspense, William Bernhardt takes us into the fault lines of the criminal justice system, where one mistake, a twist of fate, or an explosive secret can mean the difference between justice and its cataclysmic undoing. In Capital Offense, attorney Ben Kincaid stands amid the chaos of a violent collision between vengeance and death-and it’s up to him to discover where the truth lies.
Professor Dennis Thomas arrives at the law office of Ben Kincaid with a bizarre request: Thomas wants to know if Kincaid can help him beat a murder charge-of a killing yet to happen. The professor’s intended victim: a Tulsa cop who had refused to authorize a search for Thomas’s missing wife. For seven days, Joslyn Thomas had lain in the twisted wreckage of her car, dying a horrifically slow death in an isolated ravine. Now, insane with grief, Thomas wants to kill Detective Christopher Sentz. Kincaid warns him not to, but that very same day someone fires seven bullets into the police officer.
Suddenly Kincaid’s conversation with Thomas is privileged and Thomas is begging Kincaid to defend him. Thomas claims he didn’t shoot Sentz-even though he’d wanted to. Something about the bookish, addled Dennis Thomas tugs on Kincaid’s conscience, and against all advice, he decides to represent this troubled man in the center of a media and political firestorm.
But the trial doesn’t go Kincaid’s way, and a verdict of capital murder is bearing down on Dennis Thomas. That’s when Kincaid’s personal private detective, Loving, starts prying loose pieces of a shocking secret. Working in the shadows of the law, using every trick that works, Loving risks his life to construct an entirely new narrative about Detective Sentz, Joslyn Thomas, and madness in another guise: the kind that every citizen should fear, and no one will recognize-until it is too late.

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“He didn’t call for me by name. He just called for one of the scrub boys.”

Tubbs placed her fists squarely on her hips. “Well, why didn’t you say so? If that’s all it is-”

“Wait a minute,” Sentz said. “I’m confused. I haven’t called for anyone.”

“Are you sure?” Loving replied. “That’s what the boss told me.” He glanced down at Sentz’s name tag. “Oh my gosh. I thought you were Dr. Thomas.”

Tubbs and Sentz exchanged a look. “You thought I was Dr. Thomas?”

“Yeah. Did I get that wrong?”

“You could say that,” Tubbs replied. “Because Dr. Thomas was a woman. And she’s been dead since April.”

“Oh, gee, maybe I misheard.”

“And who gave you these instructions?”

“Who?” Loving took a deep breath. “My boss.”

“Yes, but who?”

“That would be, um… Bob.”

“Bob Finlay?”

“Yeah. That’s the one.”

“When did they put him in charge of Intern Dispatch?”

“Just this morning. I think it’s a temporary thing.”

“Thank goodness. He’s already off to a flying start.”

The doctor cut in. “What did you say your name was?”

Loving coughed. “I don’t think I said.”

“Well, say it now, Einstein.”

“My name is… um…”

“Is this too hard for you?”

“No, it’s… Kit. Kit Car… lisle.”

Sentz frowned. “I don’t think I’ve heard that name before.”

“I’m new.”

“That explains a great deal. Are you sure they said Thomas? Perhaps it was Tomlinson.”

Loving snapped his fingers. “You know, I think it was.”

Sentz pointed to the opposite end of the corridor. “You need to be down there.”

“Oh, wow. I didn’t know. Hope I’m not too late. Thanks.”

Loving skittered away, dragging his mop with him. Had he covered okay? He hoped so. He sensed more irritation than suspicion. In his experience, doctors were usually very smart, but that intelligence often came with a decided lack of patience. He hoped Sentz would go back to his work without any alarm bells ringing in his head, or anything else that might inspire him to alter his plans.

He decided to wear the greens out of the hospital. He didn’t want to spend any more time here than necessary. If Shaw spotted him he would be in serious trouble. And he would lose his only lead.

Loving left the same way he came in, careful not to attract the attention of the woman seated at the front desk, then made his way to his van. He climbed into the back, opened his tool box, and retrieved a small GPS homing device. He slid open the magnetic base and then, making sure no one was watching, attached it to the inside of the metal cover over the rear driver’s-side wheel of Shaw’s car.

Just in case their plans changed, Loving would be able to follow the man or find him anywhere within a twenty-five-mile range.

He returned to his van and called Ben. He didn’t answer. Probably in court or prepping. He left a message telling him to reply. Not that Loving really had anything to tell him yet. But he at least had some prospects.

He drove to a nearby Starbucks. Personally, he thought the coffee was ridiculously overpriced, and he wasn’t sure you could call it coffee after they slathered whipped cream and chocolate sprinkles on it, but he wasn’t really interested in the menu. He wanted the Internet access. He didn’t have time to drive home.

He logged onto some of the PI websites and did a detailed search on Dr. Sentz. Dr. Gary Sentz, as it turned out, was indeed the brother of the deceased detective. One brother into med school, the other into the police department. That had to make for some interesting family reunions.

He kept searching. Dr. Sentz had graduated from OU medical school about ten years ago and had been working in Tulsa for most of the time since. He had only come to St. Benedict’s in the last year. He was a specialist in nuclear medicine, whatever that was. Loving assumed it meant he had the unhappy job of administering chemotherapy and similar treatments. He had noticed signs inside the hospital bearing radiation warnings.

What Loving couldn’t find, no matter how hard he looked, were any criminal connections, any signs of Sentz being involved in nefarious activities. He had a perfectly clean record, other than a few traffic offenses. He didn’t appear to have any friends or family involved with gangs or smuggling. He lived in a nice neighborhood. He had no discernible access to contraband. There was no evidence of a drug habit or dependency problem.

Loving closed the lid of his laptop and pondered. What the heck was this man orchestrating? Why did he need Shaw and his accomplices?

He didn’t know. And he suspected he wasn’t going to find out from a laptop.

He brought out his cell phone, which was no ordinary cell phone. He remembered a time when his investigative work had primarily involved tracking people down and bashing their heads together. Unfortunately, those days were long gone. Like it or not, he had been forced out of his Luddite state into the brave new technological world. If the bad guys were going to be playing with these tools, he had to as well.

Some months ago he had downloaded a piece of critical (and illegal) firmware off the Internet. It basically turned his phone into a radio capable of picking up other messages broadcast on the same channel, rather than the usual phone, which was limited to picking up messages addressed to you. It was similar to phone cloning, but for that you needed temporary access to your target’s SIM card. Loving didn’t see how he was going to swipe Shaw’s phone, even for a little while, and he doubted Shaw would give it to him. He would have to content himself with intercepting messages.

He entered Shaw’s phone number, which he had overheard at the hospital. He also needed to know Shaw’s service network. He didn’t, but there were only so many choices-Verizon, Cingular, T-Mobile, and the rest. Trial and error would get him there in time. He had to stay within range of the same base station, but that shouldn’t be too hard. He knew where Shaw lived and worked and he had a GPS transmitter on the man’s car.

When the good Dr. Sentz got around to texting the details to Shaw, Loving would get the same message. And he would respond, too, in his own way.

He just hoped it was in time. He felt bad about not having been any more useful to Ben in this trial. He didn’t like to let the Skipper down. If he could figure out what was going on between Shaw and Dr. Sentz-and quite possibly the late Chris Sentz as well-there was a good chance it might be useful to Ben. Shaw had said something about Ben getting close during his cross-examination. Close to what?

He checked the transponder screen to make sure the GPS signal was working. It was. Shaw had left the hospital and returned to police headquarters.

Loving would be watching this signal very carefully over the next few days. When they made their move, he would be ready.

31

“Yes, Joslyn and I had our spats, just like I would imagine every couple does. But we still loved each other deeply. We’d been married seven years, and we were together two years before that, and those were the happiest days of my life. I never before had a relationship anything like it. She was my entire life. She was everything to me.”

Ben watched Dennis carefully as he testified. He had been concerned that, having been so calculating throughout the pretrial period, Dennis would try to put on a show. But he seemed to have taken Ben’s cautions to heart. If anything, he was leaning in the opposite direction. He was coming off a little cold, a little robotic. Even as he talked about how much he loved his wife, Ben was not sure his vocal inflection and body language carried the force of his words.

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